- 29 December 2013: Peter Greste and Mohamed Fahmy arrested in police raid on Cairo's Marriott Hotel. Baher Mohamed later arrested at home
- 29 January 2014: 20 people including the three journalists referred to trial, charged with spreading false news, belonging to a terrorist organisation and operating without a permit
- 22 February: First court appearance of the three journalists
- 23 June: Defendants sentenced to seven years, with Baher Mohamed receiving an additional three years
- 12 November: President Sisi signs decree allowing repatriation of foreign prisoners
- 1 January 2015: Highest court orders retrial, but the three journalists not allowed bail
- 1 February 2015: Peter Greste freed and deported, his two colleagues remain behind bars
Tuesday, February 3, 2015
Al-Jazeera journalist Mohamed Fahmy gives up Egypt citizenship
Mohamed Fahmy, one of two al-Jazeera journalists still held in Egypt, has renounced his Egyptian citizenship to secure his release, his family say.
Mr Fahmy's brother said the journalist, who is also Canadian, was told to give up his nationality or his freedom.
Canada says his release is imminent. The status of his Egyptian colleague Baher Mohamed remains unclear.
Peter Greste, who was freed on Sunday, said he felt "incredible angst" at leaving his colleagues in a Cairo jail.
The Australian journalist was freed from prison and deported after 400 days behind bars.
The three al-Jazeera English journalists were arrested in 2013 after being accused of collaborating with the banned Muslim Brotherhood after former President Mohammed Morsi was ousted by the military.
All three denied the charges against them and said their trial was a sham.
'Release imminent'
A decree issued by President Abdel Fatah al-Sisi last November allows the deportation of foreign prisoners.
Mr Fahmy's brother, Adel, told reporters that the Egyptian authorities gave the journalist the choice between "dropping the nationality or his freedom".
"It was a very difficult decision. Mohamed is very proud and comes from a patriotic family of high-ranking military and policemen that have defended this country and fought its wars," Adel Fahmy said.
Many of his family members were offended by Mr Fahmy's decision to relinquish his citizenship, he added, but said his fiance and his mother had pushed him to do so.
Canadian Foreign Minister John Baird said on Monday that Mr Fahmy's release was "imminent" but gave no details of a resolution.
There are still concerns over the fate of Mr Mohamed, however, because he is an Egyptian who holds no dual nationality.
'Step forward'
Speaking on Monday, Mr Greste said: "If it's right for me to be free then it's right for all of them to be free."
He described his release as "a massive step forward" for the Egyptian authorities but added that he felt a "real mix of emotions" after learning he would be freed.
There was "real stress in having to say goodbye to my colleagues and friends - people who've really become family inside that prison," he said.
In June last year, Mr Fahmy and Mr Greste were sentenced to seven years in prison and Mr Mohamed to 10. Their sentences sparked an international outcry.
The three men's convictions were overturned on 1 January but they remained in custody pending a retrial.
Several students have also been held in the same case. The students deny working for Al-Jazeera but it is thought that material filmed on their phones was used by the network.
In a separate case, Abdullah El-Shamy, a journalist for Al-Jazeera's Arabic channel, was arrested in August 2013 when police broke up a protest by supporters of Mr Morsi.
He was released on health grounds in June 2014 after a hunger strike of nearly five months.
According to campaign group Reporters Without Borders, there are currently 165 journalists imprisoned around the world, including 15 in Egypt.
EPL: Arsenal's big win over Aston Villa sees it close on top four as Southampton slip up against Swansea City
Olivier Giroud, Mesut Ozil and Santi Cazorla sparkled as Arsenal closed on the Premier League's top four by crushing goal-shy Aston Villa 5-0 at home on Sunday.
Ozil freed Giroud to open the scoring in the eighth minute and the France striker returned the favour in the second half before goals from Theo Walcott, Cazorla and Hector Bellerin completed a one-sided victory.
It was a fifth consecutive win in all competitions for Arsene Wenger's men and took them level on points with fourth-place Southampton, who saw Ryan Bertrand sent off in a 1-0 loss at home to Swansea City.
"You cannot fault anyone's performance," Wenger told Sky Sports. "Mesut did well. It takes a while to get that sharpness back.
"We had a rigorous attitude defensively. Even at 4-0, 5-0 up, people were willing to work back. We want to play collectively and offensively to the end."
The defeat saw Paul Lambert's Villa -- three points above the relegation zone in 16th place -- set an unwanted club record of six consecutive league games without scoring.
The Midlands club, which hosts leaders Chelsea next weekend, has gone 10 hours and 12 minutes since Christian Benteke found the net against Manchester United on December 20.
"It is difficult. When you don't score, you don't win games," Lambert said.
"You have to keep working hard in training and hopefully it turns around. We had chances to score, but you have to take them."
Ozil was making his first league start since October 5 and he immediately made an impact by cleverly using the outside of his left foot to flick a pass through to Giroud.
The Frenchman had only Brad Guzan to beat and after briefly getting ahead of the ball, he calmly chipped the Villa goalkeeper to register his fifth goal in his last six league appearances.
Sanchez absent
After Cazorla had hit the post, Ozil doubled Arsenal's lead 11 minutes into the second half, gliding onto an elegant, piercing pass from Giroud and trundling a shot into the bottom-right corner.
Walcott had had to wait even longer for a league start, having last started on New Year's Day 2014 due to a serious knee injury, and he marked the occasion by gathering Cazorla's pass and curling home in the 63rd minute.
Villa's porous defence meant that Alexis Sanchez's absence with a hamstring problem was barely felt by Arsenal and after Giroud had hit the bar with a header, Cazorla added a fourth goal from the penalty spot.
Young full-back Bellerin got in on the act in injury time, meeting Cazorla's lay-off with a precise, side-foot shot from 20 yards that went in via the base of the left-hand post.
Buoyed by recent wins over Arsenal and Manchester United, Southampton made an enterprising start against Swansea at St Mary's, with Nathaniel Clyne teeing up James Ward-Prowse for a shot that Lukasz Fabianski saved.
But after hitting the post from long range early in the second half, Jonjo Shelvey gave Swansea a smash-and-grab win in the 83rd minute by crashing a shot inside Fraser Forster's left-hand post from 25 yards.
Swansea captain Ashley Williams produced two goal-line blocks in quick succession to deny Sadio Mane an equaliser before Bertrand saw red for an ugly challenge on Modou Barrow, who was stretchered off.
"It was a good goal from them, but I think the luckiest team won today," said Southampton manager Ronald Koeman.
"They came for one point, but got three points. We have to accept that."
Shelvey's goal lifted Swansea to ninth place and left Southampton above Arsenal on goal difference alone in the fourth and final Champions League qualifying berth.
"We took our chances when we got them and all in all, we can be happy," said Swansea manager Garry Monk.
"With this win we are back on track, and what a terrific strike from Jonjo Shelvey."
Cristiano Ronaldo: Real Madrid star 'worth at least £300m'
Cristiano Ronaldo would sell for £300m if Real Madrid decided to let him leave tomorrow, the Portuguese superstar's agent has told BBC Sport.
Jorge Mendes said the Portugal captain was the "best sportsman ever".
"He is the best player ever in the world. You can't compare him with anybody else," Mendes told sports editor Dan Roan.
Ronaldo, 29, was voted the world's best player for a third time last month, beating Lionel Messi to the award.
Asked how much he was worth, Mendes said: "Cristano Ronaldo? One billion. His buyout clause one billion, so it is one billion. It is impossible to find someone like him.
"If for any reason the club decide to sell him tomorrow for 300 million, someone will pay."
Mendes oversaw Ronaldo's move from Sporting Lisbon to Manchester United for £12.24m in 2003
However, Mendes insisted his countryman, who cost Real Madrid a world record fee of £80m in 2009, would stay at the Bernabeu, despite his "love" for supporters of former club Manchester United.
Asked if he will finish his career there, Mendes said "for sure". "He will not leave Real Madrid," he added.
Mendes, who is reported to have brokered more than £1bn worth of transfers, has been described as the most powerful figure in the game.
"People have the wrong idea about agents. Being an agent means many different things. I'm someone normal, I'm working hard every single day. I have ambitions, determination and being honest, doing the right things - this is most important.
He described football as the "most important sport in the world" and defended players' wages, saying they "deserve the maximum possible".
Mendes compared working with his players on contracts as "like a family".
"It is like when you talk with your son, with your family always to try to find the best way to support them."
Mendes described the ban on third-party ownership of players as "illegal" and "catastrophic" for clubs.
He said: "Fifa and Uefa are not the police. I think that's it's very important to establish rules, the right rules, but not to stop it.
"I'm sure that very soon the courts will not accept [the ban].
Mendes, a former DJ and nightclub owner, also represents Jose Mourinho, Luiz Felipe Scolari, Radamel Falcao, Angel Di Maria, James Rodriguez, David De Gea, Victor Valdes and Diego Costa.
Mendes oversaw Ronaldo's move from Sporting Lisbon to Manchester United for £12.24m in 2003
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Monday, February 2, 2015
Angelina Jolie named world's most admired woman
Angelina Jolie
Actress-director Angelina Jolie has been named the most admired woman in the world, leaving behind Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousafzai, Hillary Clinton, Queen Elizabeth II and even India's Congress chief Sonia Gandhi.
According to a new poll of 25,000 people, the mother-of-six and United Nations special envoy was most worthy of respect internationally, reports dailymail.co.uk.
ALSO READ: Brad Pitt in talks for Angelina Jolie's 'Africa'
However, the internet-based market research firm YouGov study found that Britons still voted Queen Elizabeth II into the top spot nationally, pushing actress Judi Dench into second place. Jolie, 39, last directed the critically acclaimed film "Unbroken", which was about the Second World War, and has been travelling around the world visiting war zones since 2001.
In second place was 17-year-old Malala Yousafzai, who survived being shot by the Talban and won this year's Nobel Peace Prize.Clinton, the former US Secretary of State, rounded out the top three. The poll was conducted across 23 countries, with each nation producing different results.
The Queen was widely admired along with First Lady Michelle Obama, who came in fifth and surprisingly singer Celine Dion who took the sixth spot, ahead of Oprah Winfrey at seven and Julia Roberts who was eighth most admired woman.
Burmese leader Aung San Suu Kyi came in at nine, while German Chancellor Angela Merkel was tenth most admired globally. Close behind Merkel are singers Taylor Swift and Beyonce Knowles at 11th and 12th place. Sonia Gandhi is on the 13th spot, just ahead of actress Jennifer Lawrence. Duchess of Cambridge Kate Middleton comes in 15th in the worldwide results.
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WATCH: Angelina Jolie's Short Film About Refugees Might Move You to Tears
According to a new poll of 25,000 people, the mother-of-six and United Nations special envoy was most worthy of respect internationally, reports dailymail.co.uk.
ALSO READ: Brad Pitt in talks for Angelina Jolie's 'Africa'
However, the internet-based market research firm YouGov study found that Britons still voted Queen Elizabeth II into the top spot nationally, pushing actress Judi Dench into second place. Jolie, 39, last directed the critically acclaimed film "Unbroken", which was about the Second World War, and has been travelling around the world visiting war zones since 2001.
In second place was 17-year-old Malala Yousafzai, who survived being shot by the Talban and won this year's Nobel Peace Prize.Clinton, the former US Secretary of State, rounded out the top three. The poll was conducted across 23 countries, with each nation producing different results.
The Queen was widely admired along with First Lady Michelle Obama, who came in fifth and surprisingly singer Celine Dion who took the sixth spot, ahead of Oprah Winfrey at seven and Julia Roberts who was eighth most admired woman.
Burmese leader Aung San Suu Kyi came in at nine, while German Chancellor Angela Merkel was tenth most admired globally. Close behind Merkel are singers Taylor Swift and Beyonce Knowles at 11th and 12th place. Sonia Gandhi is on the 13th spot, just ahead of actress Jennifer Lawrence. Duchess of Cambridge Kate Middleton comes in 15th in the worldwide results.
Follow TOI Entertain on Twitter >>> @ TOIEntertain
Like TOI Entertain on Facebook >>> TOIEntertain
WATCH: Angelina Jolie's Short Film About Refugees Might Move You to Tears
Obama plans tax on US firms overseas to fix roads at home
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US President Barack Obama plans to close a tax loophole that allows US firms to avoid paying taxes on overseas profits, the White House says.
His 2016 budget will impose a one-off 14% tax on US profits stashed overseas, as well as a 19% tax on any future profits as they are earned.
The $238bn (£158bn) raised will be used to fund road projects in the US.
The proposal is one of the main components of Mr Obama's latest budget, due to be presented on Monday.
The spending plan, including the proposal on overseas profits, would require approval from the Republican-controlled Congress to be made law, something seen as unlikely.
Research firm Audit Analytics calculated last April that US firms in total have $2.1 trillion-worth of profits stashed abroad.
It found US conglomerate General Electric had the most profit stored overseas at $110bn. Tech giants Microsoft and Apple and drugs companies Pfizer and Merck all featured in the top five.
No tax is currently due on foreign profits as long as they are not brought into the United States.
As a result some companies put their earnings in low tax jurisdictions and simply leave them there.
The White House said its plans for an immediate 14% tax would raise $238bn, which would be used to fund a wider $478bn public works programme of road, bridge and public transport upgrades.
"This transition tax would mean that companies have to pay US tax right now on the $2 trillion they already have overseas, rather than being able to delay paying any US tax indefinitely," a White House official said.
The official said that after this one-off tax, the 19% permanent tax firms would have to pay on overseas profits "would level the playing field, and encourage firms to create jobs here at home."
The tax rate is far lower than the current US top corporate tax rate of 35%.
Ukraine rebel leader Zakharchenko 'to raise 100,000 men'
Pro-Russian separatist leader Alexander Zakharchenko has announced plans to recruit 100,000 men, as fighting with Ukrainian forces intensifies.
The rebels want to push government forces out of the eastern regions of Donetsk and Luhansk and are trying to capture the key town of Debaltseve.
Dozens of people including civilians were killed in clashes and artillery fire at the weekend.
Attempts to agree a truce failed when rebel negotiators did not turn up.
A fragile ceasefire agreed in early September in the Belarusian capital, Minsk, collapsed last month when rebels stepped up their offensive on several Ukrainian positions and seized Donetsk airport.
Rebels were accused of carrying out an artillery attack on the south-eastern Ukrainian port city of Mariupol which left 30 civilians dead.
Ukrainian government forces have also been blamed for deadly attacks on Donetsk city and other rebel-held areas last month in which dozens of civilians were killed.
"Mobilisation will start in 11 days' time," Mr Zakharchenko, the head of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic, told Donetsk news agency.
However, the rebels' ability to raise large numbers of forces is unclear.
The first question that springs to mind, after Alexander Zakharchenko's mobilisation announcement, is where all these fighters will come from. The territory of the self-declared Donetsk and Luhansk People's Republics had a pre-war population of a few million, and it is unclear how many people remain.
So it could be political bluster - an attempt to match rhetorically the Ukrainian government's own mobilisation plans. However, it should be noted that Kiev plans to carry this out over the course of the year and not, like the separatists, in little more than a week.
But Mr Zakharchenko's statement could indicate something much more serious. The rebels have already threatened a full-scale offensive, promising to push to the borders of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions, and possibly beyond. This most likely would require a huge number of forces. Many in Kiev are now concerned the Donetsk leader may be preparing the ground for major intervention from Ukraine's neighbour, Russia.
Christopher Miller, a journalist based near Debaltseve, told the BBC he thought it was "very unlikely" the rebels would be able to mobilise 100,000 men.
It was more likely that rebel leaders were attempting to use the announcement as "a disguise to bring in more Russian volunteers", he said.
Ukraine has alleged the rebels are being helped by as many as 9,000 Russian servicemen, a claim the government in Moscow denies.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov meanwhile accused the Ukrainian government of taking "a course towards a military solution to the conflict".
'Reserve force'
Mr Zakharchenko emphasised that recruits to separatist forces would be voluntary, Donetsk news agency said.
"It is a reserve force which will definitely be able to resist any attack," he was quoted as saying.
They would have a month's combat training with the aim of providing five additional brigades, the Donetsk agency reports.
Ukraine's government has also announced plans to boost its forces in the east, and mobilise 200,000 troops in 2015.
Tanks and other heavy military vehicles were seen heading towards Debaltseve on Sunday in an attempt to bolster government defences in the town.
Hundreds of civilians were moved out of the town by Ukrainian government forces amid reports that the separatists had reached the outskirts.
A Canadian journalist who is in the conflict zone said the rebels had been involved in a tough battle as they tried to encircle Debaltseve.
"It's been quite surprising to hear how many have said they are experiencing significant losses and many of their fellow fighters have been killed," Kristina Jovanovski told the BBC World Service Newsday programme. "That's not something that you often hear."
Military officials in Kiev said on Monday that five soldiers had been killed in the past 24 hours, although separatists said the number was more than 20. Thirteen civilians were killed in separatist-held areas during the same period, rebel sources said.
The latest fatalities mean at least 60 people have been killed during a weekend of heavy violence in the eastern regions of Donetsk and Luhansk.
Overall, more than 5,000 people have been killed and some 1.2 million have fled their homes since last April, when the rebels seized a big swathe of Luhansk and Donetsk regions, following Russia's annexation of Crimea.
Jewish Food Tokyo Has a New Kosher Restaurant
A kosher restaurant will open to the public in Tokyo next month, reports JTA. The restaurant, which is located at the Chabad house run by Rabbi Mendy Sudakevich in the Takanawa neighborhood, has been feeding customers for several weeks—but by appointment only. Once it officially opens, “Chana Place’s” will serve classic Israeli/Middle Eastern cuisine to up to 14 guests at one time. And believe it or not, they’ll have competition—there’s already a kosher felafel cart operated by the other Chabad rabbi in Tokyo, Binyomin Edery.
Tokyo might seem like a surprising place for a kosher restaurant, but there are a few hundred Jews living in the city, and thousands of Israeli tourists pass through Japan each year—plus there’s plenty of interest from Japanese diners, who have already embraced several non-kosher Jewish eateries. The two countries have positive diplomatic relations, with a new reciprocal one-year work-holiday visa program, and a concerted marketing effort to woo Japanese tourists to the Holy Land. (We’ve been following the anime series Israel, Like! with delight for the last couple of months.)
Behatzlacha and itadakimasu!
(Image: a_b_normal123/Flickr)
- See more at: http://jewcy.com/jewish-food/new-kosher-restaurant-japan-tokyo#sthash.yOeoLckp.dpuf